Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Protesters delay game in fitting end to Cal rivalry

- By Luca Eva■s levans@scng.com

BERKELEY ❯❯ It was so unsurprisi­ng, given the setting under the leaning forests of the Berkeley hills, that there was hardly a stir among tens of thousands when their football game didn't start on time.

As USC and Cal assembled for the opening kickoff Saturday afternoon, players began milling about in confusion as a horde of ambiguous protestors suddenly assembled at midfield. They held a sign, ripped away by security. They locked arms, remaining grounded to the turf even with attempts to bring them to their feet. The protestors delayed the start of USC-Cal by minutes, security looking confused on how exactly to handle the situation, but the fans hardly seeming to exude an ounce of shock.

Cal has long been a pillar of student right-to-freespeech, on-campus protests interwoven into the institutio­n's history. Just a few days earlier, Cal witnessed a massive student walkout in support of Palestine amid the internatio­nal Israel-Palestine conflict, as reported by Berkeleysi­de. That, for many in attendance, seemed the natural reason for the assembly Saturday afternoon; but the protest actually appeared related to the suspension of professor Ivonne de Valle, whom Cal had allegedly found harassed and stalked a professor at UC Davis, according to a report from KQED.

The protesters were taken off the field in handcuffs and taken to jail, a campus policeman said. And thus, a fitting commenceme­nt of sorts to the final game in a historic USC-Cal rivalry.

Riley returns

There seemed, for a moment — with analyst Kliff Kingsbury and wide receivers coach Dennis Simmons running out in pregame warmups — a chance that head coach Lincoln Riley might not man the sidelines Saturday against Cal after a week-plus-long battle with pneumonia from which he was still clearly recovering.

But with little less than an hour before kickoff, Riley's customary white visor emerged from the locker room, and he assumed the headset during pregame introducti­ons.

Branch injured

A USC secondary already hit hard with injury got hit worse Saturday, as redshirt freshman safety Zion Branch was helped off the field to the medical tent in the second quarter. Branch was starting in place of the injured Max Williams, who didn't dress for the second straight day.

Branch didn't return for the rest of the first half, with Bryson Shaw filling in on his snaps.

Alexander serves suspension

The emotion was carved in the distraught Bear Alexander's face, the USC defensive lineman relegated to the sideline in the vital final seconds of USC's game with Utah after crashing helmet-tohelmet into Utes quarterbac­k Bryson Barnes for a third-down targeting penalty that extended an eventual game-winning Utah drive.

He burst into tears after being ejected, emotions only partially veiled by a ski mask as he watched his defense fight on to no avail without him, captain Justin Dedich coming over for a few words of encouragem­ent and a pat on the back.

“Bear has been an awesome player for us, and he was broken up about the penalty,” Riley said postgame. “That was the one that really gave them some life.”

After Alexander's fearsome start, creating havoc in the middle of USC's defensive line, his impact had lessened ever since a tough game against Colorado. Against Utah, though, he recorded five pressures and three hits, as the rest of USC's line struggled to keep tabs on shifty quarterbac­k Barnes.

His ejection meant no Alexander in the first half Saturday against Cal — a major loss up front clearly felt on a first-half run defense that surrendere­d three touchdowns to running back Jaydn Ott. Arizona transfer Kyon Barrs started in Alexander's place, a chance to seize opportunit­y after he'd been given just a handful of snaps for weeks.

 ?? JED JACOBSOHN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Police escort protestors off the field after they prevented an on-time start of the USC-Cal football game on Saturday in Berkeley. The protestors were demanding the reinstatem­ent of UC professor Ivonne del Valle, who is currently on paid administra­tive leave.
JED JACOBSOHN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Police escort protestors off the field after they prevented an on-time start of the USC-Cal football game on Saturday in Berkeley. The protestors were demanding the reinstatem­ent of UC professor Ivonne del Valle, who is currently on paid administra­tive leave.

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